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Monday, November 26, 2018

It’s near
that time of the year again…. Christmas—the jolliest and merriest of all time
of the year! It’s also the only time I regret of being born in Indonesia. Here,
Christmas is not celebrated much in public (except in malls—with huge discount,
or in Hotels). I can do decorating at home, of course; however, living in an
apartment has its limitation. To compensate, I always try to fill my Decembers with
Christmas-themed readings. Maybe I can’t see much of Christmas trees or lights
around me, but I can certainly experience it through books! :) So, this is my
Christmas reading plan through the coming December:

Dombey and Son

I am now in
one third of the book (p. 277) and plan to finish it through December. This
will also be my last entry for my 2018 reading challenges.

A Christmas Carol

What is
Christmas without A Christmas Carol?
We are indebted too much to it to not reading it every year (or two)! A
bookstagrammer @dickens.and.docks is hosting an interesting event:
#DickensDecember with readalongs and photo challenge. I am interested mostly in A Christmas Carol
readalong, which begins at December 3rd, one chapter a day, and ends
with Discussion Day at December 8th. It looks really fun; but I have
not decided my participation yet. Should I??

Dickens at Christmas

This beautiful
book has been my Christmas “bible” (along with A Christmas Carol, of course) since last year. I have enjoyed
reading slowly The Chimes and TheCricket
on the Hearth, and planned to read some (or all – but maybe I better leave
some for next years) of the rest after finishing A Christmas Carol:

The Battle of Life

The Haunted Man & The Ghost’s Bargain

From
Household Words:

A Christmas Tree

A Christmas Dinner

What Christmas is, as We Grow Older –
hey, this must be interesting!

The Seven Poor Travelers

From A
Round of Stories by the Christmas Fire:

The Poor Relation’s Story

The Child Story

Form
Another Round of Stories by the Christmas Fire:

The Schoolboy’s Story

Nobody’s Story

Anthony Trollope

I have yet
to get acquainted with Trollope. His Christmas stories should be the best way
to begin. Plus the edition is so lovely!

Wednesday, November 21, 2018

I have just
realized that my last Classics Club Spin was: Five. Years. Ago! I almost didn’t
believe it. How could I take so long a break from one of the coolest events of
The Classics Club? I can only blame it on my everlasting tight schedules and the
too-many-things-on-my-plate. But it will change now. For the first time after
five years, I will be taking The Classics Club Spin, YAY!

Rule of the
game:

At your blog, before next Tuesday 27th
November 2018, create a post that lists twenty books of your choice that remain
“to be read” on your Classics Club list. On Tuesday 27th November, we’ll post a
number from 1 through 20. The challenge is to read whatever book falls under
that number on your Spin List, by 31st January, 2019.

The idea
this time is daring us to tackle huge (chunkster) books which we have been
neglecting so far. My list of the second round is quite random, as it
consists of many out-of-my-comfort-zone books. Thus, for this spin, I opt to
list these books, along with some books I've been waiting or curious to read
for some times. Here they are:

1. One Flew over the Cuckoo's Nest by Ken
Kessey

2. The Sound and the Fury by William
Faulkner

3. This Earth of Mankind by Pramoedya A.
Toer (the only Indonesian lit on my list)

4. The Beautiful and Damned by F. Scott
Fitzgerald

5. The Deerslayer by James Fenimore Cooper

6. Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe

7. Persuasion by Jane Austen

8. North and South by Elizabeh Gaskell

9. Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora
Neale Hurston

10. Pilgrim's Progress by John Bunyan

11. Rebecca by Daphne du Maurier

12. The Warden by Anthony Trollope

13. The Crucible by Arthur Miller

14. Slaughterhouse-Five by Kurt Vonnegut

15. Hard Times by Charles Dickens

16. The Glass Menagerie by Tennessee
Williams

17. All the Pretty Horses by Cormac McCarthy

18. O Pioneers! By Willa Cather

19. Othello by William Shakespeare

20. The Red Badge of Courage by Stephen
Crane

Based on my
list, which number do you wish I get? :) I hope it would be number 3—as I am most excited to read
the book (yeah… I haven’t read the number one classic from my own country—shame
on me!) before the movie adaptation is released on 2019.

Thursday, November 15, 2018

Confession:
I have always thought that A.S. Byatt is a man. Silly me! When started reading Possession, I still had no idea what I
would face. As the story unfolding, I have felt it a bit odd that a man should
write so femininely a prose. Then I googled about the book; and only then I
realized that A.S. is actually
Antonia Susan. Byatt is a woman!

When I said Byatt wrote 'femininely', it is partly due to the amount of poems
scattered throughout the book, and partly because both poems and prose were
thick with feminism.

Possession is a kind of literary
detective. Two modern young scholars investigate an unknown love affair of two
fictional Victorian poets: the famous Randolph Henry Ash and the unknown—albeit
as talented as her lover—Christabel LaMotte. Roland Mitchell—a scholar who is
obsessed with R.H. Ash—has accidentally found draft of letters slipped inside
an ancient book. They were written by Ash (a married man) to a mysterious
woman, indicating a love interest. Roland’s investigation leads him to
LaMotte's distant relative who is also an established scholar on the poetess:
Maud Bailey. The pair studies tons of letters, poems, and diary entries of and
about Ash and LaMotte, to unveil the mystery. But it turns out they are not
alone, their colleagues seem to be attracted to the mystery also, and compete
with them to find what was believed as the key evidence of the love affair: a
letter buried in Ash's wife's coffin. Parallel with the investigation, the
readers follow also the lives and struggles of Roland and Maud (and their
blooming love).

I can't say I enjoyed Possession very
much. The combination of metaphysic, poetry, and feminism is not my cup of tea.
I skipped most of the poems (it's long and blubbering - for me at least, because I had no idea what those are about). What I could enjoy was
only the fast-paced literary investigation and a bit spark of attraction in
Roland's and Maud's relationship. Added with a little twist in the epilogue,
this book would have been promising, but, like I said, I just couldn't chew
overdoses of feminism. Maybe Byatt is just too sophisticated for me.